Institution
National Marine Fisheries Service
Government•Silver Spring, Maryland, United States•
About: National Marine Fisheries Service is a government organization based out in Silver Spring, Maryland, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Fisheries management. The organization has 3949 authors who have published 7053 publications receiving 305073 citations. The organization is also known as: NOAA Fisheries & NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service.
Topics: Population, Fisheries management, Oncorhynchus, Fishing, Bycatch
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Variation at the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (mt-COI) gene was examined in 15 species of North Pacific skates, indicating that a DNA-based barcoding approach may be useful for species identification.
Abstract: Variation at the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (mt-COI) gene was examined in 15 species of North Pacific skates. Thirteen species had unique sequences, indicating that a DNA-based barcoding approach may be useful for species identification.
91 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated differences between natural and heavily modified beaches in terms of microclimate and one aspect of biological condition and found that the modified beach had significantly higher daily mean light intensity, air temperature and substrate temperature, and significantly lower daily mean relative humidity.
Abstract: Human alteration of Puget Sound shorelines is extensive yet its ecological consequences are largely undocumented. This study evaluates differences between natural and heavily modified beaches in terms of microclimate and one aspect of biological condition. Electronic data laggers were placed at a tidal height of approximately 3.7 m (12 ft) above mean lower low water during July 16–20, 2001, to monitor light intensity, substrate and air temperatures, and humidity. Substrate samples were collected at the end of the monitoring period to evaluate condition and density of eggs from surf smelt (Hypomesus pretiosus), a forage fish species that spawns on gravel-sand beaches in the upper intertidal zone. The modified beach had significantly higher daily mean light intensity, air temperature and substrate temperature, and significantly lower daily mean relative humidity. Particularly striking were the differences in substrate temperature which, on the natural beach, ranged from 12.1°C to 18.2°C (mean=14.1°C) and on the modified beach ranged from 14.4°C to 29.4°C (mean=18.8°C). In addition to these different means and more extreme values, microclimate conditions on the modified beach were more variable, indicative of a less buffered environment. The proportion of smelt eggs containing live embryos on the altered beach was approximately half that of the natural beach.
91 citations
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91 citations
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TL;DR: The application of microplate scintillation technology to develop high throughput assays for several classes of marine phycotoxin based on their differential pharmacologic actions have been described and have been demonstrated to be useful for assessing algal toxicity and for assay-guided purification of toxins.
Abstract: The lack of rapid, high throughput assays is a major obstacle to many aspects of research on marine phycotoxins. Here we describe the application of microplate scintillation technology to develop high throughput assays for several classes of marine phycotoxin based on their differential pharmacologic actions. High throughput "drug discovery" format microplate receptor binding assays developed for brevetoxins/ciguatoxins and for domoic acid are described. Analysis for brevetoxins/ciguatoxins is carried out by binding competition with [3H] PbTx-3 for site 5 on the voltage dependent sodium channel in rat brain synaptosomes. Analysis of domoic acid is based on binding competition with [3H] kainic acid for the kainate/quisqualate glutamate receptor using frog brain synaptosomes. In addition, a high throughput microplate 45Ca flux assay for determination of maitotoxins is described. These microplate assays can be completed within 3 hours, have sensitivities of less than 1 ng, and can analyze dozens of samples simultaneously. The assays have been demonstrated to be useful for assessing algal toxicity and for assay-guided purification of toxins, and are applicable to the detection of biotoxins in seafood.
91 citations
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TL;DR: A study was made of externally measurable features that change significantly during the parr-smolt transformation and appear to reflect chronological age more faithfully than does integumentary pigmentation.
91 citations
Authors
Showing all 3963 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Thomas N. Williams | 132 | 1145 | 95109 |
Thomas P. Quinn | 96 | 455 | 33939 |
Michael P. Carey | 90 | 463 | 27005 |
Rebecca Fisher | 86 | 255 | 50260 |
Peter Kareiva | 84 | 260 | 33352 |
Daniel E. Schindler | 69 | 222 | 18359 |
Robin S. Waples | 69 | 195 | 22752 |
Ronald W. Hardy | 64 | 202 | 14145 |
Kenneth E. Sherman | 64 | 348 | 15934 |
André E. Punt | 63 | 400 | 16532 |
Jason S. Link | 60 | 217 | 12799 |
William G. Sunda | 57 | 103 | 13933 |
Steven J. Bograd | 57 | 220 | 12511 |
Walton W. Dickhoff | 56 | 130 | 8507 |
Jay Barlow | 55 | 241 | 9939 |